Adapting to The Norm – What Does It Mean to Your Business Sytle?

Traveling through parts of Europe lately I noticed the slow pace with which everything was done.  There was no one hurrying to help you in grocery stores. In fact, the cashiers sat behind the registers with barely a smile and you bagged your own groceries!  Eating out was slow and deliberate.  You could count on a good hour or more before you were even mid way through a meal.  Drinks arrived slowly, food arrived slowly and so did the bill.

Many businesses closed for a few hours around the lunch hour.  Some shops even had little hand written signs saying they would be back shortly.   Is this good customer service?  How do these businesses stay in business?   Yet, it is the norm for these companies and they don’t seem to eager to change.

We all have to find our norm.  The way we transact business whether we are the owner of the company or an employee that is taking pride in their area of responsibility.  Taking on someone’s norm is not necessarily good for your business.  Be aware of what others are doing and the reactions of their client base.  Are their profits soaring while yours are falling?  What could you adapt from these other businesses while still staying true to your core values?  Things you may consider are:

  1. How quickly do you return phone calls?  Do you see the red light flash and do nothing?
  2. Do you really listen to what people have to say or are you too quick to push your own agenda?
  3. Have you adapted your hours of operation to fit the needs of your customers?
  4. Have you trained your staff appropriately and given them the tools to be successful?  Their success is ultimately your success.
  5. No you go the “extra mile” or do you stop short if you feel there is nothing in it for you.  Remember you customers are looking for the WIIFM as well!  (What’s in it for me)
  6. Do you do all that you promise you will do in the time you promise?  Where can you adapt to be more realistic and not over promise and under deliver?

There is always someone around the corner doing things which may seem better, faster, cheaper, easier.  Your job is to be innovative in your thinking and open minded to the fact that you just might have to change.

Irreverent Yet Insightful Business Principles

Key Pointe publishes articles and writes a blog to inform and share best and sometimes worst practices.  Today we are asking for your feedback on what business axioms or principles you have discovered which help you work better, faster or to understand business in a way that is unique, funny or provides that rare but special “ah ha” moment.

An example would be the ironies of the “Peter Principle” that states: “People rise to their level of incompetence.”  There are many corollaries to this intriguing concept.  My favorite is that major business decisions also rise to their level of incompetence.  That is, the more critical a business decision, the more probable is that it will be taken away from the manager with expertise and be decided upon either in a steering committee (to avoid any accountability) or in the C-Suite where really awful decisions are sometimes rendered out of ignorance.  While this principle is meant to foster discussion about the follies of some bureaucracies, all of us can relate to the IT conversion or major business blunder caused by executives who thought they knew…remember the new coke or the Edsel?

I can remember talking to a high level bureaucrat who announced that the Board had decided to immediately close a major call center.  I paused, and said that adjusting work distribution would be critical as it had nearly 400 staff at work.  He responded that I was incorrect and that no one was working there.  I replied that I had just returned from a visit there last week, and that we had over 400 staff conducting business there today.  A bureaucrat located remotely and especially at headquarters can be very dangerous to good decision-making!

My personal favorite business axiom is Parkinson’s Law, written by C. Northcote Parkinson in 1954:  “Work expands to the time available.”  Parkinson’s Law is the only management principle I can remember with clarity from my four collegiate years of study in administration, and it is one of the most irreverent but also insightful approaches to the discussion of how workload  is not proportional to staffing within bureaucratic organizations.  It reminds us that in the corporate world, one must understand human behavior, embrace humor and recognize a tendency by people to make foolish decisions especially when the standard decision-making policy is thwarted by executive management.

As a student or project manager, it is critical to determine how much time a task will take or it will naturally expand to 2 or 3 times the actual amount of time needed.  As students we quickly learned this fact after laboring several days on a paper while as seniors, we would start the project two hours before the deadline and do surprisingly well.  While this principle is well known, fewer and fewer people apply it today.  Most business schools and certainly nearly all governments have forgotten its importance.  One only has to look at the state of governments across the globe to recognize that the tendency to grow bureaucracies is fundamental and that such organizations have absolutely no knowledge of how to manage time and work.  I know the first example to come to mind is the DMV.

Another more serious example of Parkinson’s Law’s insidious nature is the bureaucrat’s tendency to seek complexity rather than simplicity.  Take the process of how America’s laws are codified and regulated.  Whether it is the new health care law or Dodd-Frank, the means to develop a law has become as large a bureaucracy as  those helping us unravel the mystery of our tax code in America.  It does explain why there are so many lawyers and how society continues to creates work for them.

To reduce any government agency will supposedly cause a calamity of epic proportions.  The austerity plans in Europe and at our own local governments is yet to be embraced by our national government who always finds a reason to ignore its committee recommendations and defer decisions by kicking the most difficult issues down the road.  This is not how the most admired corporations work and perhaps why there sometimes seems to be a real friction between business and government.  Civil servants are not supposed to be productive but to spend all the money in their budgets or face a draconian cut in next year’s funding and resources.  The incredible growth in the federal government and its spending demonstrates Parkinson’s thesis that bureaucracies and agencies will proliferate even if they no longer have a reason to exist.

Let me know if you have identified other management “principles” or have examples of Peter and Parkinson Law to share.  We would like to add your examples to our collection!

Are You a Morning Or Evening Person? Productivity Counts

It’s September 1st and I am sitting outside on a beautiful Thursday afternoon.   I find I don’t do this enough… just take my work outdoors and enjoy the day.  There is a slight breeze and the temperature is just right.   The day appears to be rather lazy, and yet I am powering through work that I have been trying to get to for weeks!  No distractions, no phones ringing (at least that I can hear) and no meetings to attend. A prefect day to concentrate on what needs to be done.

There is so much controversy on over where a person is most productive.  If they have 8-5 jobs that require them to be on location are they the most productive?  Are people with flexible work schedules more productive?  What about taking into consideration the person.  When is a person the most productive?  I know some people who are slow to start their day.  They are just not morning people so for them it is like walking in a trance until they get their coffee, had time to adjust to the day and feel that they are in full swing.  It make take them a few hours to find that they are firing on all cylinders.

If you want to know when someone is at their peak, ask them what time they would like to start a meeting.  An example would be when my Assistant says, I know you are not a morning person, but can we meet at 8:00 am?   I’d prefer 10:00 am.   Obviously, she knows that I am not at my peak early in the morning.  However, I am raring to go at later in the date and she is ready to call it quits.

The human brain can concentrate for only so long.  Some say no longer than 30 minutes before we begin to wander and have to force ourselves back on task.  We need to take breaks and when we don’t we will find that we lose concentration and have to refocus.  We are also not as productive.  Each of us can be classified into either a morning or a night person.  And we all know which type we are.

When it comes to work and work location, where are people most productive?  And why do people have to be on site if their job doesn’t require them to absolutely be there?  Companies can save money by allowing their employees to work from home and many companies have adopted this culture.  For those companies that still feel “butts in seats” so they can “see the work being done” should really take a closer look.  Just because you can physically see a person sitting at their desk, does not mean they are being productive.  Shouldn’t results speak volumes?  If the work isn’t getting done, then perhaps the wrong person is in the job!

Planning for Retirement: You Are Truly On Your Own

We speak often of the generations and how groups of people born during a short period of time are influenced profoundly by common events and often by the observations of one’s own parents.  As a baby boomer, I have seen a tremendous change in how we perceive retirement versus my parents and my children’s perspective.  It seems logical that many of our parents had longer periods of employment with singular employers and many achieved pensions.  Today, if you are in the private sector, the pension was replaced by a 401k plan or you just missed the cut-off date as you have had 4 or 5 jobs these past 3 decades.

Observing our parents behavior showed a tradition of savings due to their experience living through the great depression.  Most were prudent savers and shoppers far different from our children who have easy access to credit and only our frequent caution not to overspend.

Individual responsibility for planning for retirement is a reality and as the poor returns over the last 10 years from stocks only places more pressure on us in our 50’s and early 60’s to save aggressively.

I do not coach financial planning, but this is one area that we all should take a moment to consider if we have a plan and not wait or procrastinate.  Too often people gamble to recoup dollars lost or let their emotions take hold of their investment decisions.  One fact is that we should take stock of our current saving strategies and most likely increase it.  Those that live in beautiful California know that it is very expensive and taxes are due to increase.  Our future quality of life will depend on us planning now.

Stand for Something, or Fall for Anything

I teach critical thinking skills to Undergraduate students.   One of the concepts to this class is not only what we think but why we think the way we do.  Of course our upbringing or enculturation has a great deal to do with the thought process.    How we adapt and react based upon the environment and culture shapes our values.   We then take those values into the world and apply them to all situations.  There is one problem with this logic and that is that not all people were brought up with the same values and ethics.

Part of being a critical thinker involves taking the time to understand the differences in others.  Why they think and act the way they do. We may not agree with these actions, but we can at least understand them.    When we have understanding we can then take the next step to bridging  gaps that could lead to conflict.  So many of us put such great effort into pushing our ways onto others that we don’t realize there is another way.   Of course, You have to stand for something, or you will fall for anything .   But, in order to stand for something you need to research, understand and critically think about what it is you are standing for and why.

We follow great leaders, but why do we believe they are great?  What is it about their thought process that resonates with us and allows us to want to take on their attributes and be a follower?   In business there are many leaders at many different levels.  You don’t have to have a fancy title to be a leader.  What you need is to understand people and their thought processes.  You need to help them to see the various views from  various angles and not just your own or their own.

I enjoy seeing how my students evolve from the first day of class when I ask them who taught them to think to the final week of class where they have grown into critical thinkers who can determine for themselves what they believe to be truth.

Productive Change Takes an Aware Leader

When is change good?  Are your employees on-board with the changes that you are making?  Are they telling you that they are yet you are sensing resistance?   The truth, for the most part is this – people think change is good if 1) they initiate it and 2) it benefits them or they want the change.

Change has phases that can be mapped on a change grid.  It doesn’t matter if the change is by choice or forced upon employees, the same basic change of events occur.   Knowing the signs to look for will help you manage change in a more productive and people centric matter.

The basic stages of change are as follows:

  • Change is introduced  – this is the point where the leader of the change needs to be prepared to handle what consequences may occur from this announcement.  Be prepared for the fact that not everyone will embrace the change with the same enthusiasm as you would hope.
  • Disruption to productivity -  The introduction of change means more work for people as they find their way through the new process.
  • Adapting to the change – the employee makes the decision to either get on board with the change or they will continue to fight the change.  The sooner you can get people on board and remove the negative people from the process, the sooner the change will take hold.
  • Accepting the change – at this point people are on-board with the change and are finding ways to be creative with the change process and their new role within the change.

Obviously the sooner the employee moves through the stages the quicker the organization can return to a productive mode.  However, the process can not be rushed.  Much like the Stages of Grief by Kubler/Ross, the employee may go back and forth between the stages until they finally reach acceptance.  Your job is to be their guide through the change.

“The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled.  For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different ways or truer answers.”  unknown

 

What Is the Most Important Quality In a Job? Find Out Here

CNN Money Magazine has a quick poll on their site.  Each day they ask their viewers another question and then display the results. The other day they asked the question “what do you think is the most important quality in a job?” ( I have posted the results below.)   It wasn’t surprising to me that the number one answer was satisfying work. (43%).

The question now is, what makes satisfying work?  What are the attributes of satisfying work?  For some it may be the following:

Self fulfillment, feeling of expertise and competency, recognition and respect from the people you work with, the ability to be self-directed, enjoying the challenge of being creative in your work processes, being empowered, having the training, tools and resources to do your job well.

I am sure there are many more and this is just a short list, but one well worth thinking about.

QUICK VOTE RESULTS – Money Magazine Poll!

What do you think is the most important quality in a job?

Satisfying work 43%
Good pay and benefits 39%
Flexible hours 6%
Growth opportunities 12%
Total responses to this question: 104959

A Picture Worth A Thousand Words

How many times have you said, “what a small world”?  For the last three years I have been corresponding with a business colleague in Australia via SKYPE.  At least weekly we have been talking.  Sometimes with the video camera on and sometimes with it off.  As you can image the time change has caused us to have conversations at unsightly hours for one of us.  However, on the rare occasions when we were able to hit it just right we allowed the cameras to be on.

If you have ever used SKYPE then you know that the camera provides a good view of not only you but of the things around you.  We found that we had similar books on our bookshelf as well as  going to the same coaching academy and having our certificates hanging on the wall.  Each of us have them hanging to the sides of our desks.

After three years of conversations and getting to know each other both professionally and personally it was no surprise that I was able to pick her out in a group in a hotel lobby.  I walked right up to her and without introduction, she knew exactly that it was me.

We spent the day talking business without the awkwardness of getting to know each other.  We could have been office buddies for the way we were able to get right down to business.  The other wonderful part of this meeting was the cultural aspect.  I never knew what “I have to spend a penny” meant.  It means using the bathroom.

I am taking my colleague and friend around Hollywood and Beverly Hills today before she continues on the New York.  I can’t wait to share and have been told I have an open invitation to Australia which I know I will be taking her up on in the future.

If you have not brought technology into your company I would highly suggest that you do.  It is not expensive to add a video cam to your computer and SKYPE is free.  If your best client or customer does not have a video cam, why not buy one for them?  The holidays are approaching and what better way to invest in your future business goals than to see your clients face to face.

Intentions are Great, But Its the Results that Matter

“Some of us will do our jobs and some will not, but we will be judged only by one thing – THE RESULTS”

Vince Lombardi

I’m a Packer fan and as a little girl I remember watching Vince Lombardi with his fedora and overcoat standing on the sidelines, clipboard in hand coaching his team.  Of course at that time I had no idea what he was doing I only knew that when the players wearing the gold and green did certain things, the family stood up and cheered.  The camera would be on the players one minute and the next it would be showing Coach Lombardi.   Certainly this man was powerful to make the players perform so well.

We all set out with an intention and that intention requires an effort.  The attitude we go in with can affect the result.  These three concepts are often confused by employees and managers.   Effort is how hard I try.  Intentions are the expectations you hoped for and Results are what you achieved.

A person can have the best intentions and apply their effort until they are blue in the face and still not gain the results they hoped for.  We all work to improve and in the end we are responsible for our own performance.  It doesn’t matter how long you have been doing something a certain way, if it isn’t producing the desired result, its time to find a better way.

I started a new workout program and have the best intentions of getting more fit then I have been in years.  I am putting in effort and giving it my all each day.  I am hoping to get the results I am seeking.  However, I am not doing this alone.  I have a support system around me that provides encouragement and perspective.  My transformation will not happen over night and I know it takes hard work and dedication.  But, I have the right attitude and attitude is everything.

None of us can expect results if we don’t have the proper tools.  Check your tool box and see what you need.  Think of these tools:

  1. Support
  2. Communication
  3. Commitment
  4. Motivation
  5. Relationships
  6. Follow Through
  7. Discipline
  8. A teacher/mentor/coach

If you are missing any it could be the reason why you are not getting the results you want.

Strategy is Everything- Know Where You are Going and Why!

When we are so eager to get to the end results we forget to observe the road signs that  guide us, danger could await.  Everything we do requires a strategic plan.  Some plans are pages long and require months to formulate.  These types of plans are detailed and every step of the process is purposefully planned.  Other strategic plans are shorter and may be in bullet format.   Determining  what needs to be accomplished will dictate how detailed the plan needs to be.  However, taking off down the road without knowing how you are going to get there is dangerous.

Within any business there are the dreamers, the planners, and the implementors and it takes all types to successfully run a business.  Rarely are the dreamers the same people who are the implementors just as the implementors are not necessarily the best dreamers. Know your strength and then play to that strength and hire the person that provides the skills that you lack.

Small businesses and entrepreneurs are eager for success and will take off down the road well-intentioned, but not knowing how they are going to get where they “think” they want to go.  There are only  so many hours in day, resources to do the job and money to put towards growing the business.

A strategic plan provides the following information:

  1. Identifies the intention  or the purpose.  What is the reason you are doing something and what is the anticipated expectation from this action.   Are you placing an ad in a trade magazine and what do you anticipate will happen from the ad. If you are expecting increased sales, do you have the manpower to handle the new orders?  Remember, there are the dreamers that want to more into uncharted territories, but you need the implementors to fulfill on the expectations.
  2. Set up the goals you need to accomplish to reach your intention or purpose.
  3. Identifying the approaches you will take to reach the goals that then satisfy the intent or purpose.  Break down the things that need to be done.  This is where you may want to use bullets or outline format.
  4. Enlist action plans that you will take to reach the goals. For each action what steps need to be taken.  Identify the internal and external factors to this plan.
  5. Monitor the plan and make adjustments as needed along the way.

If you follow a plan (your road map) your trip will have purpose and you will be acting out of strategic thought rather than on a whim that could cost you time and money that you don’t have.